Ask ten cyclists for the best road bicycle wheels and you will get ten brand names and zero useful reasoning. The truth is less exciting and more helpful: the best wheels are the ones engineered to how you actually ride. A 150-pound climber and a 200-pound criterium racer need different wheels, and neither one needs the most expensive option on the wall.
I build wheels one set at a time, so this is the comparison I actually walk customers through at the bench.
What Makes the Best Road Bicycle Wheels?
Forget the marketing. Four things decide whether a wheelset is right for you:
- Weight. Lower weight helps acceleration and climbing. It matters most on hills and in repeated surges.
- Rim depth. Deeper rims hold speed better on flats and in a straight line, at the cost of crosswind stability and a bit of weight.
- Build quality. Spoke choice, hub quality, and the hands that laced it matter more than the logo.
- Value. The best road bicycle wheels deliver their performance without a premium you are paying purely for a brand name.
Lightweight versus Aero: Which Suits Your Terrain
This is the core decision for most riders.
| Priority | Best for | Tradeoff |
| Lightweight build | Climbers, hilly routes, repeated accelerations | Less speed retention on flats |
| Mid-depth (around 38 to 50mm) | All-rounders, mixed terrain | The sensible default for most riders |
| Deep section (60mm+) | Flat courses, time trials, racing | Crosswind handling, more weight |
If you are searching for lightweight bicycle wheels, you are probably a climber or ride hilly terrain. If you are after the best racing bicycle wheels, you likely want mid-to-deep sections to retain speed. Most riders land happily in the middle.
Alloy versus Carbon Road Wheels: The Honest Version
Carbon is not automatically better. A well-built alloy wheelset can climb and accelerate better than many factory carbon wheels, at a fraction of the price. Carbon earns its cost when you need the lightest, stiffest possible build or deep aero sections. For many riders, premium alloy is the smarter buy.
Here is how that maps to the Bike Improve wheel lineup:
| Wheelset | Type | Best for |
| C30 (19mm wide, 30mm deep) | Alloy clincher, rim brake | Lightweight climbing, everyday road |
| C31 (25.6mm wide, 31mm deep) | Alloy clincher, rim or disc | Road and gravel all-rounder |
| G29 | Carbon clincher, disc only | Gravel and fast road |
| C38 / C50 / C60 / C88 | Carbon clincher, rim or disc | Aero, racing (depth in mm) |
| T38 / T50 / T60 / T88 | Carbon tubular, rim or disc | Racing, deep aero (depth in mm) |
The number in each carbon model is the rim depth in millimeters, so a C38 is a 38mm-deep carbon clincher and a C88 is a deep 88mm aero rim. Many of my customers tell me the C30 and C31 alloy wheels outperform factory carbon wheels they have owned. That is the alloy case in one sentence.
Why Factory Wheels Disappoint Serious Riders
Factory wheels are assembled to a price point in a production line. They are built to a spec sheet, not to you. That is why so many riders upgrade and immediately feel the difference: a hand-built wheel uses spoke tension and component choices dialed to your weight and riding, not an average.
Hot take: Most Riders Are On Wheels That Are Too Deep and Too Stiff
The industry sells aero. But unless you are racing flat courses or time trialing, a 60mm-plus deep wheel is often the wrong call. It punishes you in crosswinds, weighs more, and rides harsh, all for speed retention you rarely use. Most road riders are faster and far more comfortable on a mid-depth wheel matched to their terrain. The best road bicycle wheels for the average rider are lighter and shallower than what they get talked into.
How Bike Improve Builds Your Road Wheels
I build each wheelset by hand with quality rims, hubs, and Sapim spokes, tensioned and trued to your weight and riding style. Most builds use Sapim CXRay spokes, with Super Spokes available for riders who want extra durability. Bike Improve custom builds carry a two-year warranty. [VERIFY: confirm 2-year warranty term.] Want to spec your own? Use the wheel builder, or bring your bike in for a test ride and feel the difference before you buy.
See the full wheel range and pricing here.
We are at 10927 Santa Monica Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90025, open Monday to Saturday, 11 AM to 5 PM. Call (310) 400-0363 or email info@nirwheels.com.
Want the best road bicycle wheels for how you actually ride? Build your own or come in for a test ride.